Region:
All
California
West
South
Midwest
Northeast
|
Jump to :
Select...
Today
November 26, 2025
November 25, 2025
November 24, 2025
November 23, 2025
November 22, 2025
November 21, 2025
November 20, 2025
November 19, 2025
November 18, 2025
November 17, 2025
November 16, 2025
November 15, 2025
November 14, 2025
November 13, 2025
November 12, 2025
November 11, 2025
November 10, 2025
November 9, 2025
November 8, 2025
November 7, 2025
November 6, 2025
November 5, 2025
November 4, 2025
November 3, 2025
November 2, 2025
November 1, 2025
October 31, 2025
October 30, 2025
October 29, 2025
October 28, 2025
| View
All Lists | FAQ
Date: 11/26/25 2:28 pm From: Dennis Paulson via Tweeters <tweeters...> Subject: Re: [Tweeters] Savannah sparrows in winter?
Julia, small numbers of Savannah Sparrows winter widely in western Washington (like the alliteration?), all the way north into southwestern BC. I would expect them only in wide-open grassy areas, but if those are present, there could be Savannahs there.
Dennis Paulson
Seattle
> On Nov 26, 2025, at 2:02 PM, Julia H via Tweeters <tweeters...> wrote:
>
> I was surprised to see an ebird checklist for a local (Seattle) park that included savannah sparrow.
>
> In my experience I never see savannah sparrows in Seattle in winter, which would seem to make sense based on their feeding patterns (I'm not sure how they'd survive winter!), and this range map from Cornell seems to agree: https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Savannah_Sparrow/maps-range <https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Savannah_Sparrow/maps-range>
>
> But when I look at the range map for savannah sparrow based on ebird-reported observations, one gets the impression that there's quite a lot of savannah sparrows in western Washington in winter: https://ebird.org/map/savspa?neg=true&<env.minX...>&<env.minY...>&<env.maxX...>&<env.maxY...>&zh=true&gp=false&ev=Z&excludeExX=false&excludeExAll=false&mr=12-2&bmo=12&emo=2&yr=all&byr=1900&eyr=2025 <https://ebird.org/map/savspa?neg=true&<env.minX...>&<env.minY...>&<env.maxX...>&<env.maxY...>&zh=true&gp=false&ev=Z&excludeExX=false&excludeExAll=false&mr=12-2&bmo=12&emo=2&yr=all&byr=1900&eyr=2025>
>
> Should I be looking harder for this sparrow in winter? Or is that aggregated data just likely a lot of rather mistaken birders?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Julia
> _______________________________________________
> Tweeters mailing list
> <Tweeters...>
> http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters
_______________________________________________ Tweeters mailing list <Tweeters...>http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters
Join us on Facebook!